In genetically modified plants, the introduced transgenes are sometimes not expressed. They can be silenced. Transgenes can also cause the silencing of endogenous plant genes if they are sufficiently homologous, a phenomenon known as co-suppression. Silencing occurs transcriptionally trod post-transcriptionally but silencing of endogenous genes seems predominantly post-transcriptional. If vital transgenes are introduced and silenced, the post-transcriptional process also prevents homologous RNA viruses from accumulating; this is a means of generating virus-resistant plants. A major goal of current research is to dissect the mechanism(s) of these sequence-homology-dependent gene silencing phenomena. Various factors seem to play a role, including DNA methylation, transgene copy number and the repetitiveness of the transgene insert, transgene expression level, possible production of aberrant RNAs, and ectopic DNA-DNA interactions. The causal relationship between these factors and the link between transcriptional and post-transcriptional silencing is not always clear. In this review we discuss various observations associated with gene silencing and attempt to relate them.
CITATION STYLE
Stam, M., Mol, J. N. M., & Kooter, J. M. (1997). The silence of genes in transgenic plants. Annals of Botany. Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1006/anbo.1996.0295
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